Brad Knowles wrote:
>Darren G Pifer wrote:
>>> One of our list serve administrators is experiencing an issue with one of
>> her listserves.
If it's a Listserv(r) list, why are you posting here :)
(Listserv(r) is a registered trademark[1] owned by the developer of a
particular email list management product, and it shouldn't be used
generically.)
>> Here is her description of the issue. She is sending
>> text to her listserve which is a moderated list. She approves the
>> message but as a member of the list, the email is received with 3
>> attachments: ATT00001.c, ATT00002.htm, and ATT00003.c. The
>> administrator has 2 other lists and when she sends text, she receives
>> them as text. She would like email sent as text to be received as text.
>>The only time I've heard of anything like this is when there are different
>character sets being used in some of the headers or footers (sometimes space
>characters), thus causing the different parts of the message to be put in
>different MIME body parts (as described in FAQ 4.39 at
><http://wiki.list.org/x/84A9>).
>>You could try deleting all list-specific headers and footers and re-creating
>them, this time making sure that you don't put in any non-ASCII characters.
> Or maybe you've got ASCII characters in there, but there are non-ASCII
>characters in the submitted message, such as accented characters in
>someone's name or signature?
>>Other than that, I have no idea how this kind of thing would happen.
The .htm extension on the middle "attachment" which I assume is the
message body indicates she is not sending a text/plain message but
rather a text/html message, and content filtering is not removing the
html part or converting it to plain text. The other "attachments" are
probably the msg_header and msg_footer as Brad suggests. The FAQ Brad
references is the relevant one. The difference between lists may be
that this is the only one that adds msg_header and msg_footer.
I may not have this exactly right, but the only way to know for sure is
to see a raw message from the list or at least the content of the
three "attachments"
[1] <http://www.lsoft.com/corporate/trademark.asp>
--
Mark Sapiro <mark at msapiro.net> The highway is for gamblers,
San Francisco Bay Area, California better use your sense - B. Dylan